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The '''[[2015–16 NBA season|2015–16]] [[Philadelphia 76ers]] season''' was the second worst in franchise history, one game better than their 9-73 mark in the 1972-'73 season.<ref>{{cite web|title=76ers Introduce Updated Brand Identity|url=http://www.nba.com/sixers/news/150512-logos|website=[[Philadelphia 76ers]]|publisher=[[National Basketball Association]]|accessdate=3 June 2015}}</ref> It was also the second straight season that [[Joel Embiid]], their third pick in the [[2014 NBA draft]], would not suit up for the 76ers due to a leg injury. Philadelphia broke the record for the longest losing streak in American professional sports history with 27 straight losses over this season and last season with a 114–116 loss to the [[2015–16 Houston Rockets season|Houston Rockets]]. The losing streak would reach to 28 games (with the 18 straight losses tying the record for longest opening season losing streak with the [[2009–10 New Jersey Nets season|2009–10 New Jersey Nets]]) before getting their first victory at home against the [[2015–16 Los Angeles Lakers season|Los Angeles Lakers]], which was also [[Kobe Bryant]]'s last game against the 76ers in Philadelphia. Philadelphia would also hire former [[Phoenix Suns]] owner, coach, general manager, and four-time [[NBA Executive of the Year]] winner [[Jerry Colangelo]] on December 7, 2015 as their Chairman of Basketball Operations. Eleven days later, former [[Denver Nuggets]], [[Phoenix Suns]], [[New York Knicks]], and [[Los Angeles Lakers]] head coach [[Mike D'Antoni]] would join the team as an associate head coach. Near the end of the season, general manager [[Sam Hinkie]] would announce his resignation from his position, being replaced by Jerry's son [[Bryan Colangelo]] before the end of the season. Jerry would also announce his personal demotion from his original position afterwards. They finished just one game shy of tying the NBA record for most losses in a season set by themselves during their [[1972–73 Philadelphia 76ers season|1972–73 season]] when they went 9–73. However, it would be the season where Sam Hinkie's goal of "The Process" came into full fruition since they'd later earn the #1 selection in the [[2016 NBA draft]].
The '''[[2015–16 NBA season|2015–16]] [[Philadelphia 76ers]] season''' was the second worst in franchise history, one game better than their 9-73 mark in the 1972-'73 season.<ref>{{cite web|title=76ers Introduce Updated Brand Identity|url=http://www.nba.com/sixers/news/150512-logos|website=[[Philadelphia 76ers]]|publisher=[[National Basketball Association]]|accessdate=3 June 2015}}</ref> It was also the second straight season that [[Joel Embiid]], the third pick in the [[2014 NBA draft]], would not suit up for the 76ers due to a leg injury. Philadelphia broke the record for the longest losing streak in American professional sports history with 27 straight losses over this season and last season with a 114–116 loss to the [[2015–16 Houston Rockets season|Houston Rockets]]. The losing streak would reach to 28 games (with the 18 straight losses tying the record for longest opening season losing streak with the [[2009–10 New Jersey Nets season|2009–10 New Jersey Nets]]) before getting their first victory at home against the [[2015–16 Los Angeles Lakers season|Los Angeles Lakers]], which was also [[Kobe Bryant]]'s last game against the 76ers in Philadelphia. Philadelphia would also hire former [[Phoenix Suns]] owner, coach, general manager, and four-time [[NBA Executive of the Year]] winner [[Jerry Colangelo]] on December 7, 2015 as their Chairman of Basketball Operations. Eleven days later, former [[Denver Nuggets]], [[Phoenix Suns]], [[New York Knicks]], and [[Los Angeles Lakers]] head coach [[Mike D'Antoni]] would join the team as an associate head coach. Near the end of the season, general manager [[Sam Hinkie]] would announce his resignation from his position, being replaced by Jerry's son [[Bryan Colangelo]] before the end of the season. Jerry would also announce his personal demotion from his original position afterwards. They finished just one game shy of tying the NBA record for most losses in a season set by themselves during their [[1972–73 Philadelphia 76ers season|1972–73 season]] when they went 9–73. However, it would be the season where Sam Hinkie's goal of "The Process" came into full fruition since they'd later earn the #1 selection in the [[2016 NBA draft]].


==Draft picks==
==Draft picks==

Revision as of 03:08, 12 April 2018

2015–16 Philadelphia 76ers season
Head coachBrett Brown
General managerSam Hinkie (resigned)
Bryan Colangelo
OwnersJoshua Harris
ArenaWells Fargo Center
Results
Record10–72 (.122)
PlaceDivision: 5th (Atlantic)
Conference: 15th (Eastern)
Playoff finishDid not qualify

Stats at Basketball-Reference.com
Local media
TelevisionCSN, TCN
RadioWPEN
< 2014–15 2016–17 >

The 2015–16 Philadelphia 76ers season was the second worst in franchise history, one game better than their 9-73 mark in the 1972-'73 season.[1] It was also the second straight season that Joel Embiid, the third pick in the 2014 NBA draft, would not suit up for the 76ers due to a leg injury. Philadelphia broke the record for the longest losing streak in American professional sports history with 27 straight losses over this season and last season with a 114–116 loss to the Houston Rockets. The losing streak would reach to 28 games (with the 18 straight losses tying the record for longest opening season losing streak with the 2009–10 New Jersey Nets) before getting their first victory at home against the Los Angeles Lakers, which was also Kobe Bryant's last game against the 76ers in Philadelphia. Philadelphia would also hire former Phoenix Suns owner, coach, general manager, and four-time NBA Executive of the Year winner Jerry Colangelo on December 7, 2015 as their Chairman of Basketball Operations. Eleven days later, former Denver Nuggets, Phoenix Suns, New York Knicks, and Los Angeles Lakers head coach Mike D'Antoni would join the team as an associate head coach. Near the end of the season, general manager Sam Hinkie would announce his resignation from his position, being replaced by Jerry's son Bryan Colangelo before the end of the season. Jerry would also announce his personal demotion from his original position afterwards. They finished just one game shy of tying the NBA record for most losses in a season set by themselves during their 1972–73 season when they went 9–73. However, it would be the season where Sam Hinkie's goal of "The Process" came into full fruition since they'd later earn the #1 selection in the 2016 NBA draft.

Draft picks

Round Pick Player Position Nationality College / Team
1 3 Jahlil Okafor C  United States Duke
2 35 Guillermo Hernangómez C  Spain Baloncesto Sevilla (Spain)
2 37 Richaun Holmes PF / C  United States Bowling Green
2 47 Artūras Gudaitis C  Lithuania Žalgiris Kaunas (Lithuania)
2 58 J. P. Tokoto SG  United States North Carolina
2 60 Luka Mitrović PF  Serbia Crvena Zvezda (Serbia)

Game log

Preseason

2015 pre-season game log
Total: 2–5 (Home: 2–1; Road: 0–4)
Pre-season: 2–5 (home: 2–1; road: 0–4)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
1 October 6 @ Washington 95–129 Canaan, Noel (13) Jerami Grant (8) Isaiah Canaan (6) Verizon Center
11,670
0–1
2 October 8 Cleveland 115–114 Jerami Grant (19) Nerlens Noel (15) Robert Covington (6) Wells Fargo Center
8,229
1–1
3 October 10 Brooklyn 97–95 Robert Covington (23) Robert Covington (8) Isaiah Canaan (8) Times Union Center
6,737
2–1
4 October 12 @ New York 88–94 Isaiah Canaan (18) Christian Wood (10) Aldemir, Grant, McRae, Wilbekin (2) Madison Square Garden
19,255
2–2
5 October 16 Washington 118–127 Scottie Wilbekin (21) Furkan Aldemir (14) T. J. McConnell (10) Wells Fargo Center
10,798
2–3
6 October 18 @ Brooklyn 91–92 Nerlens Noel (15) Nerlens Noel (11) Nerlens Noel (5) Barclays Center
10,756
2–4
7 October 23 @ Boston 65–81 Jahlil Okafor (12) Nerlens Noel (9) Canaan, Jackson (3) Verizon Wireless Arena
8,403
2–5
2015–16 season schedule

Regular season game log

2015–16 game log
Total: 10–72 (Home: 7–34; Road: 3–38)
October: 0–2 (home: 0–1; road: 0–1)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
1 October 28 @ Boston L 95–112 Jahlil Okafor (26) Nerlens Noel (12) T. J. McConnell (4) TD Garden
18,624
0–1
2 October 30 Utah L 71–99 Grant, Stauskas (12) Nerlens Noel (10) T. J. McConnell (4) Wells Fargo Center
17,122
0–2
November : 0–16 (home: 0–6; road: 0–10)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
3 November 2 Cleveland L 100–107 Jahlil Okafor (24) Nerlens Noel (8) T. J. McConnell (12) Wells Fargo Center
18,094
0–3
4 November 4 @ Milwaukee L 87–91 Jahlil Okafor (21) Nerlens Noel (12) T. J. McConnell (12) BMO Harris Bradley Center
12,437
0–4
5 November 6 @ Cleveland L 102–108 Noel, Okafor (18) Nerlens Noel (12) Canaan, McConnell (4) Quicken Loans Arena
20,562
0–5
6 November 7 Orlando L 97–105 Isaiah Canaan (23) T. J. McConnell (8) T. J. McConnell (9) Wells Fargo Center
15,207
0–6
7 November 9 Chicago L 88–111 Jahlil Okafor (21) Jahlil Okafor (15) T. J. McConnell (8) Wells Fargo Center
13,879
0–7
8 November 11 Toronto L 103–119 Jahlil Okafor (26) Jerami Grant (10) T. J. McConnell (13) Wells Fargo Center
12,744
0–8
9 November 13 @ Oklahoma City L 85–102 Christian Wood (15) Nerlens Noel (11) McConnell, Stauskas (3) Chesapeake Energy Arena
18,203
0–9
10 November 14 @ San Antonio L 83–92 Jahlil Okafor (21) Jahlil Okafor (12) Phil Pressey (6) AT&T Center
18,717
0–10
11 November 16 Dallas L 86–92 Jahlil Okafor (19) Nerlens Noel (12) T. J. McConnell (6) Wells Fargo Center
11,555
0–11
12 November 18 Indiana L 85–112 T.J. McConnell (16) Hollis Thompson (9) Phil Pressey (5) Wells Fargo Center
11,080
0–12
13 November 20 @ Charlotte L 88–113 Nerlens Noel (16) Nerlens Noel (16) T.J. McConnell (6) Time Warner Cable Arena
17,926
0–13
14 November 21 @ Miami L 91–96 Isaiah Canaan (22) Jahlil Okafor (11) T.J. McConnell (5) American Airlines Arena
19,673
0–14
15 November 23 @ Minnesota L 95–100 Jahlil Okafor (25) Jahlil Okafor (12) T.J. McConnell (8) Target Center
11,382
0–15
16 November 25 @ Boston L 80–84 Jahlil Okafor (19) Robert Covington (14) Phil Pressey (4) TD Garden
17,588
0–16
17 November 27 @ Houston L 114–116 Robert Covington (28) Robert Covington (7) T.J. McConnell (6) Toyota Center
17,306
0–17
18 November 29 @ Memphis L 84–92 Isaiah Canaan (16) Jahlil Okafor (13) T.J. McConnell (6) FedEx Forum
15,322
0–18
December : 3–13 (home: 1–5; road: 2–8)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
19 December 1 * L.A. Lakers W 103–91 Robert Covington (23) Nerlens Noel (9) T.J. McConnell (6) Wells Fargo Center
20,510
1–18
20 December 2 @ New York L 87–99 Hollis Thompson (13) Nerlens Noel (6) Canaan, Covington (3) Madison Square Garden
19,812
1–19
21 December 5 Denver L 105–108 Robert Covington (18) Robert Covington (10) T.J. McConnell (6) Wells Fargo Center
14,367
1–20
22 December 7 San Antonio L 68–119 Covington, Noel, Stauskas (13) Covington, Noel (6) Isaiah Canaan (5) Wells Fargo Center
14,449
1–21
23 December 10 @ Brooklyn L 91–100 Jahlil Okafor (22) Jahlil Okafor (10) Nik Stauskas (5) Barclays Center
13,266
1–22
24 December 11 Detroit L 95–107 Jahlil Okafor (22) Nerlens Noel (10) Kendall Marshall (6) Wells Fargo Center
14,020
1–23
25 December 13 @ Toronto L 76–96 Jahlil Okafor (23) Jahlil Okafor (14) Kendall Marshall (5) Air Canada Centre
19,800
1–24
26 December 14 @ Chicago L 96–115 Jahlil Okafor (22) Jahlil Okafor (8) Hollis Thompson (4) United Center
21,166
1–25
27 December 16 @ Atlanta L 106–127 Isaiah Canaan (24) Holmes, Okafor (7) Covington, Marshall, McConnell (4) Philips Arena
14,827
1–26
28 December 18 New York L 97–107 Jahlil Okafor (20) Hollis Thompson (7) Canaan, McConnell, Marshall, Wroten (3) Wells Fargo Center
17,880
1–27
29 December 20 @ Cleveland L 86–108 Nerlens Noel (15) Nerlens Noel (12) Kendall Marshall (5) Quicken Loans Arena
20,562
1–28
30 December 22 Memphis L 90–104 Jahlil Okafor (18) Covington, Noel (8) Tony Wroten (7) Wells Fargo Center
15,552
1–29
31 December 23 @ Milwaukee L 100–113 Jahlil Okafor (17) Jahlil Okafor (8) Kendall Marshall (7) BMO Harris Bradley Center
15,754
1–30
32 December 26 @ Phoenix W 111–104 Isaiah Canaan (22) Nerlens Noel (11) Ish Smith (5) Talking Stick Resort Arena
17,548
2–30
33 December 28 @ Utah L 91–95 Ish Smith (22) Nerlens Noel (6) Ish Smith (11) Vivint Smart Home Arena
19,911
2–31
34 December 30 @ Sacramento W 110–105 Nerlens Noel (20) Jerami Grant (11) Ish Smith (9) Sleep Train Arena
17,317
3–31
January : 4–10 (home: 3–6; road: 1–4)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
35 January 1 @ L.A. Lakers L 84–93 Nerlens Noel (15) Nerlens Noel (12) T.J. McConnell (7) Staples Center
18,997
3–32
36 January 2 @ L.A. Clippers L 99–130 Jahlil Okafor (23) Nerlens Noel (8) Ish Smith (10) Staples Center
19,212
3–33
37 January 4 Minnesota W 109–99 Ish Smith (21) Nerlens Noel (9) Ish Smith (11) Wells Fargo Center
14,013
4–33
38 January 7 Atlanta L 98–126 Jahlil Okafor (21) Nerlens Noel (13) Ish Smith (7) Wells Fargo Center
12,611
4–34
39 January 9 Toronto L 95–108 Ish Smith (28) Nerlens Noel (8) T.J. McConnell (8) Wells Fargo Center
14,100
4–35
40 January 10 Cleveland L 85–95 Jahlil Okafor (21) Nerlens Noel (9) Ish Smith (10) Wells Fargo Center
19,226
4–36
41 January 14 Chicago L 111–115 (OT) Robert Covington (25) Covington, Noel (6) Ish Smith (8) Wells Fargo Center
14,063
4–37
42 January 16 Portland W 114–89 Jahlil Okafor (25) Jahlil Okafor (10) T.J. McConnell (7) Wells Fargo Center
15,698
5–37
43 January 18 @ New York L 113–119 (OT) Jahlil Okafor (20) Nerlens Noel (16) Ish Smith (16) Madison Square Garden
19,812
5–38
44 January 20 @ Orlando W 96–87 Jahlil Okafor (20) Robert Covington (11) Ish Smith (11) Amway Center
17,746
6–38
45 January 24 Boston L 92–112 Robert Covington (25) Nerlens Noel (9) Ish Smith (4) Wells Fargo Center
9,722
6–39
46 January 26 Phoenix W 113–103 Ish Smith (20) Nerlens Noel (9) Ish Smith (9) Wells Fargo Center
10,851
7–39
47 January 27 @ Detroit L 97–110 Jerami Grant (21) Covington, Grant (8) McConnell, Smith (6) The Palace of Auburn Hills
13,712
7–40
48 January 30 * Golden State L 105–108 Isaiah Canaan (18) Robert Covington (13) Ish Smith (9) Wells Fargo Center
20,798
7–41
February : 1–11 (home: 1–5; road: 0–6)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
49 February 3 Atlanta L 86–124 Nik Stauskas (17) Nerlens Noel (7) Ish Smith (7) Wells Fargo Center
10,429
7–42
50 February 5 @ Washington L 94–106 Ish Smith (22) Nerlens Noel (8) Ish Smith (5) Verizon Center
17,305
7–43
51 February 6 Brooklyn W 103–98 Jahlil Okafor (22) Jahlil Okafor (17) T.J. McConnell (6) Wells Fargo Center
18,847
8–43
52 February 8 L.A. Clippers L 92–98 (OT) Smith, Thompson (16) Jerami Grant (11) Ish Smith (5) Wells Fargo Center
13,310
8–44
53 February 10 Sacramento L 110–114 Robert Covington (29) Jahlil Okafor (10) Ish Smith (10) Wells Fargo Center
12,501
8–45
2016 All-Star Break
54 February 19 @ New Orleans L 114–121 Nerlens Noel (24) Nerlens Noel (9) Ish Smith (7) Smoothie King Center
16,953
8–46
55 February 21 @ Dallas L 103–129 Jahlil Okafor (31) Jahlil Okafor (8) T.J. McConnell (6) American Airlines Center
20,194
8–47
56 February 23 Orlando L 115–124 Ish Smith (22) Nerlens Noel (11) Ish Smith (5) Wells Fargo Center
13,745
8–48
57 February 24 @ Detroit L 91–111 Hollis Thompson (19) Richaun Holmes (7) Marshall, Stauskas (4) The Palace of Auburn Hills
13,429
8–49
58 February 26 Washington L 94–103 Jahlil Okafor (21) Robert Covington (12) Ish Smith (8) Wells Fargo Center
16,511
8–50
59 February 28 @ Orlando L 116–130 Jahlil Okafor (26) Jerami Grant (8) Ish Smith (7) Amway Center
16,168
8–51
60 February 29 @ Washington L 108–116 Ish Smith (25) Grant, Noel (6) Ish Smith (7) Verizon Center
15,096
8–52
March : 1–14 (home: 1–8; road: 0–6)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
61 March 2 Charlotte L 99–119 Canaan, Covington, Noel (17) Robert Covington (9) Ish Smith (8) Wells Fargo Center
11,143
8–53
62 March 4 Miami L 102–112 Ish Smith (26) Ish Smith (8) Ish Smith (8) Wells Fargo Center
17,610
8–54
63 March 6 @ Miami L 98–103 Ish Smith (21) Robert Covington (9) Ish Smith (5) American Airlines Arena
19,820
8–55
64 March 9 Houston L 104–118 Ish Smith (21) Nerlens Noel (9) Ish Smith (5) Wells Fargo Center
15,237
8–56
65 March 11 Brooklyn W 95–89 Carl Landry (16) Nerlens Noel (11) Ish Smith (9) Wells Fargo Center
14,128
9–56
66 March 12 Detroit L 111–125 Isaiah Canaan (22) Hollis Thompson (7) Nik Stauskas (5) Wells Fargo Center
16,087
9–57
67 March 15 @ Brooklyn L 114–131 Isaiah Canaan (20) Carl Landry (8) Nik Stauskas (6) Barclays Center
14,560
9–58
68 March 17 Washington L 94–99 Ish Smith (20) Nerlens Noel (16) Ish Smith (7) Wells Fargo Center
10,521
9–59
69 March 18 Oklahoma City L 97–111 Nik Stauskas (23) Nerlens Noel (9) Ish Smith (7) Wells Fargo Center
20,388
9–60
70 March 20 Boston L 105–120 Carl Landry (26) Grant, Landry, Noel (8) Ish Smith (8) Wells Fargo Center
15,103
9–61
71 March 21 @ Indiana L 75–91 Canaan, Thompson (15) Ish Smith (9) McConnell, Smith (4) Bankers Life Fieldhouse
16,155
9–62
72 March 23 @ Denver L 103–104 T.J. McConnell (17) Robert Covington (9) Ish Smith (8) Pepsi Center
10,684
9–63
73 March 26 @ Portland L 105–108 Covington, Thompson, Smith (17) Ish Smith (14) Ish Smith (9) Moda Center
19,506
9–64
74 March 27 @ Golden State L 106–117 Carl Landry (22) Robert Covington (11) Ish Smith (10) Oracle Arena
19,596
9–65
75 March 29 Charlotte L 85–100 Robert Covington (18) Hollis Thompson (10) Ish Smith (6) Wells Fargo Center
14,486
9–66
April : 1–5 (home: 1–3; road: 0–2)
Game Date Team Score High points High rebounds High assists Location
Attendance
Record
76 April 1 @ Charlotte L 91–100 Grant, Thompson (17) Elton Brand (11) T.J. McConnell (7) Time Warner Cable Arena
19,244
9–67
77 April 2 Indiana L 102–115 Isaiah Canaan (24) Elton Brand (10) Ish Smith (7) Wells Fargo Center
19,213
9–68
78 April 5 New Orleans W 107–93 Carl Landry (21) Carl Landry (9) T.J. McConnell (8) Wells Fargo Center
10,978
10–68
79 April 8 New York L 102–109 Robert Covington (30) Robert Covington (11) Ish Smith (7) Wells Fargo Center
16,076
10–69
80 April 10 Milwaukee L 108–109 (OT) Ish Smith (22) Nerlens Noel (13) T.J. McConnell (9) Wells Fargo Center
16,267
10–70
81 April 12 @ Toronto L 98–122 Robert Covington (24) Nerlens Noel (10) Ish Smith (4) Air Canada Centre
19,800
10–71
82 April 13 @ Chicago L 105–115 Robert Covington (27) Nerlens Noel (6) T.J. McConnell (9) United Center
21,777
10–72
2015–16 season schedule
  • * Denotes home game sellout.
Atlantic DivisionWLPCTGBHomeRoadDivGP
yToronto Raptors5626.68332‍–‍924‍–‍1714–282
xBoston Celtics4834.5858.028‍–‍1320‍–‍2110–682
New York Knicks3250.39024.018‍–‍2314‍–‍278–882
Brooklyn Nets2161.25635.014‍–‍277‍–‍346–1082
Philadelphia 76ers1072.12246.07‍–‍343‍–‍382–1482
Eastern Conference
#TeamWLPCTGBGP
1cCleveland Cavaliers *5725.69582
2yToronto Raptors *5626.6831.082
3yMiami Heat *4834.5859.082
4xAtlanta Hawks4834.5859.082
5xBoston Celtics4834.5859.082
6xCharlotte Hornets4834.5859.082
7xIndiana Pacers4537.54912.082
8xDetroit Pistons4438.53713.082
9Chicago Bulls4240.51215.082
10Washington Wizards4141.50016.082
11Orlando Magic3547.42722.082
12Milwaukee Bucks3349.40224.082
13New York Knicks3250.39025.082
14Brooklyn Nets2161.25636.082
15Philadelphia 76ers1072.12247.082

Announcers

Name Reporter Network Number of Season
Marc Zumoff TV Play by Play CSN
TCN
21
Alaa Abdelnaby Color Commentator 1
Molly French Sideline Reporter 6
Tom McGinnis Radio Play by Play WPEN 26
Matt Cord Arena PA N/A 18

Roster

2015–16 Philadelphia 76ers roster
Players Coaches
Pos. No. Name Height Weight DOB From
F 42 Brand, Elton 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 254 lb (115 kg) 1979–03–11 Duke
G 0 Canaan, Isaiah Injured 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 201 lb (91 kg) 1991–05–21 Murray State
F 33 Covington, Robert 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 215 lb (98 kg) 1990–12–14 Tennessee State
C 21 Embiid, Joel Injured 7 ft 0 in (2.13 m) 250 lb (113 kg) 1994–03–16 Kansas
F 39 Grant, Jerami 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 210 lb (95 kg) 1994–03–12 Syracuse
F 22 Holmes, Richaun Injured 6 ft 10 in (2.08 m) 245 lb (111 kg) 1993–10–15 Bowling Green
F 7 Landry, Carl 6 ft 9 in (2.06 m) 248 lb (112 kg) 1983–09–19 Purdue
G 5 Marshall, Kendall 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 1991–08–19 North Carolina
G 12 McConnell, T. J. 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 200 lb (91 kg) 1992–03–25 Arizona
F/C 4 Noel, Nerlens (C) 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 228 lb (103 kg) 1994–04–10 Kentucky
C 8 Okafor, Jahlil Injured 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 275 lb (125 kg) 1995–12–15 Duke
G 1 Smith, Ish 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 175 lb (79 kg) 1988–07–05 Wake Forest
G 11 Stauskas, Nik 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) 205 lb (93 kg) 1993–10–07 Michigan
G/F 31 Thompson, Hollis 6 ft 8 in (2.03 m) 206 lb (93 kg) 1991–04–03 Georgetown
F 35 Wood, Christian 6 ft 11 in (2.11 m) 220 lb (100 kg) 1995–09–27 UNLV
Head coach
Assistant coach(es)

Legend
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • (DL) On assignment to
    D-League affiliate
  • Injured Injured

Roster
Last transaction: 2016–04–10

Awards

The following are some awards that took place during the 2015 season for Sixers players.

Transactions

Trades

July 10, 2015
To Philadelphia 76ers[2]
Nik Stauskas
Carl Landry
Jason Thompson
Future First Round Pick
To Sacramento Kings
Artūras Gudaitis Draft Rights
Luka Mitrović Draft Rights
December 24, 2015
To Philadelphia 76ers[3]
Ish Smith
To New Orleans Pelicans
2016 NBA draft 2nd Round Pick (from Denver)
2017 NBA Draft 2nd Round Pick

Free agents

Additions

Player Signed Former Team
Pierre Jackson[4] Signed 3-year contract worth $2.6 million Fenerbahçe Ülker
Scottie Wilbekin[5] Signed 4-year contract worth $3.5 million AEK Athens
Kendall Marshall Signed Milwaukee Bucks / Phoenix Suns
Christian Wood Signed multiple times this season UNLV Runnin' Rebels / Philadelphia 76ers / Delaware 87ers
Elton Brand Signed Atlanta Hawks
Sonny Weems Claimed off waivers Phoenix Suns

Subtractions

Player Reason Left New Team
Thomas Robinson[6] Signed 2-year contract worth $2 million Brooklyn Nets
Luc Mbah a Moute Signed contract Los Angeles Clippers
Jason Richardson Signed 1–year deal worth $1.5 million / Retired Atlanta Hawks / Retirement
Henry Sims Signed contract Phoenix Suns / Grand Rapids Drive / Brooklyn Nets
Furkan Aldemir Waived Turkey Darüşşafaka & Doğuş
Ish Smith Signed contract Washington Wizards / New Orleans Pelicans / Philadelphia 76ers
Gerald Wallace Waived Unknown
Scottie Wilbekin Waived Turkey Darüşşafaka & Doğuş
Arsalan Kazemi Waived rights away Atlanta Hawks / Houston Rockets / Iran Samen Mash'had
Pierre Jackson Waived Idaho Stampede / Texas Legends
Tony Wroten Waived New York Knicks
Christian Wood Waived multiple times this season Delaware 87ers / Philadelphia 76ers
JaKarr Sampson Waived Denver Nuggets
Sonny Weems Waived Israel Maccabi FOX Tel Aviv

References

  1. ^ "76ers Introduce Updated Brand Identity". Philadelphia 76ers. National Basketball Association. Retrieved 3 June 2015.
  2. ^ "Sixers Acquire Three Players From Sacramento". nba.com/sixers. July 10, 2015. Retrieved July 10, 2015.
  3. ^ "Sixers Acquire Ish Smith". nba.com/sixers. December 24, 2015. Retrieved December 24, 2015.
  4. ^ "Sixers Sign Pierre Jackson". nba.com/sixers. July 15, 2015. Retrieved July 15, 2015.
  5. ^ "Sixers Sign Scottie Wilbekin". nba.com/sixers. July 24, 2015. Retrieved July 24, 2015.
  6. ^ "Brooklyn Nets Sign Shane Larkin and Thomas Robinson". nba.com/nets. July 9, 2015. Archived from the original on July 11, 2015. Retrieved July 9, 2015. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)